Harry, in his historic statement before the judge: on his mother’s butler, “that two-faced shit”

It has monopolized all the front pages of the British press. Harry landed in London, arrived at the High Court of Justice and testified before the judge. Again, he swept the media. Every word he said in the room has been scrutinized and scrutinized. “Anguish”, “insanity”, “unjustified and vile conduct”, “tension” were some of those used by the Duke in this hearing on Tuesday the 6th on the lawsuit that he filed against the newspaper publisher Mirror Group Newspapers for alleged wiretapping illegal to gather information about him when he was young and in his dating years with Chelsy Davy.

Four hours of affidavit. Harry He came with a lot of energy. She smiled at the gates of the Courts. In his intervention, the son of Charles III charged against the MGN group, publisher of the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror y Sunday People, whom he accused of causing him so much pain and damage in the past. “Some journalists and editors have their hands stained with blood,” she went on to say in clear reference to the death of her mother. Diana of Wales in 1987. CNN cites that the duke chose 33 articles, of the 140 he had compiled, to gloss his words before the judge. “Each one of these items has caused me anguish,” he complained. In these reports are the keys to the demand for him.

Mobile at 12 years old?

Harry got into the matter of illegal wiretapping and assured that he was a victim of wiretapping. He even went so far as to comment that he suffered this illegal hack when he was only 12 years old, in 1996. A serious contradiction because he did not have a mobile phone at the time, he publishes The Sun. In fact, he had to admit that the first time he had his own phone was in 1998, when he entered the prestigious Eton.

About his mother’s butler, Paul Burrell, he had to admit that in 2003 he spoke about him as “that two-faced shit”, as reported by The Sun. Burrell, Diana’s most trusted person during her years as her assistant, began giving interviews about the princess after her death. Which was a hard setback for Harry, very young at the time, who turned his back on him because of his indiscretion.

Nor did he leave behind James Hewitt, his mother’s lover. The duke slipped one of his great fears of those years: that his father was Hewitt. So much so that he admitted that he was even “scared” that they would “expel him from the royal family.”

The duke continued with his narrative of reproaches and entered into speculation by stating that the tabloids were interested in him remaining “single” because he sold “more newspapers”.

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